Cheryl Morales, executive director of the Pinellas Public Library Cooperative (PPLC), briefed the county commission on countywide library services, usage and cooperative funding.
Key points: Morales said county libraries collectively provided more than 2 million visits and have roughly 470,000 active borrowers (cards are deactivated if unused for three years). Countywide programs numbered about 13,000 events with roughly 250,000 attendees over the last year; downloads and digital circulation account for about 30% of checkouts in some branches. The cooperative administers shared services — for example, the Pinellas Talking Book Library for patrons with vision impairment — and manages cooperative programs such as museum‑pass partners and catalog consortia.
Funding and county questions: Morales thanked the commission for maintaining the cooperative millage and warned state and federal aid streams are uncertain. Commissioners asked detailed questions about the cooperative funding model: how unincorporated residents are served, whether municipal contribution formulas reflect usage and whether Friends of the Library entities are appropriately supplementing programming without being backstopped by taxpayers. Morales explained the cooperative model was originally created to allow unincorporated residents access to municipal libraries without each resident paying a user fee; the cooperative allocates funds primarily by a statutory formula (90% based on expenditures, 10% on usage outside municipal service areas) and serves as the county's state aid recipient.
Transparency: Commissioners requested audited statements for member libraries and further breakdowns of PPLC administrative costs and services for specialized populations (talking book and deaf services). Morales said audited statements are available and agreed to provide them to the board.
Ending: The commission received the update and asked PPLC to provide additional financial details requested during the meeting; no county action was taken.